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Contribute to RTI Wiki
Did you know? Every PIO reply, CIC order, and First Appellate Authority order is a data point. A single documented refusal, shared openly, helps a hundred future applicants draft better RTIs. That is the working model of this wiki.
How to contribute to RTI Wiki — share RTI experiences, report documented refusals, and help build cleaner precedent for applicants across India. No account, no form-filling. Everything runs through the discussion space under each page.
What you can contribute
- A documented RTI refusal — the application, the PIO's reply, the Section clause invoked, the outcome of appeal.
- A CIC or State Information Commission order you have come across.
- A sample RTI that worked — especially for subjects not currently in the Query Builder.
- A correction — typos, broken links, dated citations, missing amendments.
- A new perspective — a State-level angle, a sector-specific practice note, a drafting tip.
How to contribute
1. Post in the discussion thread
Every content page on RTI Wiki has a discussion section at the bottom. Scroll down, type your contribution in plain language, submit. Comments are moderated before they appear — you'll see a “pending review” message on submit, and the comment becomes public once approved.
Guidelines:
- Redact personal information — do not post identification documents, phone numbers, exact addresses, or third parties' personal data.
- Be specific — name the Section cited, the authority, the date.
- Link to the PDF if it is already public (Shodhganga, RTI replies on a personal blog, etc.).
- Neutral tone — this is a reference work, not an advocacy platform.
2. Flag an error via the feedback widget
Every page carries a “Was this page helpful?” Yes/No widget at the bottom. If you click No, a short note box opens — describe what's missing or wrong. We read every one. The feedback is logged server-side with a hashed identifier (no personal tracking).
3. Suggest a new page
If a topic is missing (for example, a State-specific rule change, a sector RTI practice you've developed, a recent judgment we haven't covered), post the suggestion in the discussion of the closest existing page — for example, a missing State rules page goes into the discussion of RTI Rules start. Include:
- Proposed title.
- Two to three paragraphs of what the page would cover.
- Sources — citations, gazette references, CIC order numbers.
We turn high-signal suggestions into draft pages within about a week.
What happens to your contribution
- Moderation — every new comment is reviewed before it becomes public. Spam and personal-attack content is deleted.
- Licensing — by posting, you agree your contribution is released under the GNU Free Documentation License 1.3 (the same licence as the rest of the wiki), so that others can re-use the text freely.
- Attribution — we credit contributors by display name in the discussion itself. If you'd like your contribution woven into the main article text, tell us in the comment and we'll add a thanks line in the “Last reviewed” footer.
What this wiki needs most
As of April 2026, these categories are the highest-priority gaps:
- State-specific RTI rule changes post-14 November 2025 — the DPDP Rules, 2025 have cascaded into some State notifications.
- CIC orders interpreting the amended Section 8(1)(j) — we want to track the first wave of decisions under the new text.
- High Court rulings from 2025-2026 that touch Section 2(h) (public authority), Section 8(1)(e) (fiduciary), or Section 8(1)(h) (investigation).
- Sample RTI drafts for under-served subjects — farm subsidies, PM-KISAN, PMAY housing, student loan processing, pharma-price approvals.
- Practitioner notes — first-person essays from activists, journalists, PIOs reflecting on the working of the Act.
What this wiki does not accept
- Political campaigning or content that attacks specific individuals by name without public-record basis.
- Documents that themselves breach Section 8(1)(j) or the DPDP Act — for example, another person's identification documents obtained illegally.
- Commercial RTI-consultancy promotion — links to paid filing services.
- Unverified court order PDFs — we prefer orders already on the Court's or Commission's own website.
Editorial values
This wiki is written in the DoPT / CIC bench-book register: neutral, authoritative, third person, British-Indian spelling. If you draft a new entry, the closer your prose is to that register, the faster we can integrate it.
Every factual claim carries an inline citation. Every page ends with a “Sources” list, a “Last reviewed on” date, and a tag line. If you adopt those conventions, your contribution will sit cleanly alongside existing pages.
The reference work you are joining
RTI Wiki has grown from 91 bytes of scaffolding to a working reference on the Right to Information Act, 2005 — currently 193 indexed pages. The content has been used by PIOs in Central departments, by advocates preparing second appeals, and by journalists chasing public-record leads. Your contributions make the next applicant's job easier.
Related on this site
Last reviewed on
20 April 2026

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